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Governance, Local Government and Civil Society

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Presentation on theme: "Governance, Local Government and Civil Society"— Presentation transcript:

1 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society
PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society

2 PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society
International Donors, Governance and Civil Society: Debates about Rural Development PIA 2528 Governance, Local Government and Civil Society

3 Overview Themes Modernization (Review) Patron-Client Issues
Role of Agriculture in development Service Delivery People Centered Development Public Choice

4 Choices?

5 I. Theories of Modernizaton
MODERNIZATION: Major Theme

6 Modernization?

7 Modernization, Continued
Movement from traditional to modern (and rural to urban) in all societies The “West” has distinguishing characteristics which distinguish it from Third World Result is an assumption of Dichotomy (references include writing by Talcott Parsons, Marian Levy, Frank Sutton and in modified form Fred Riggs)

8 Modernization, Development Theory, and its Critics
Agraria vs. Industria (Popularized by Prof. George Modelski-Born in Poznan, Poland) University of Washington

9 Development: The Modernization Definition
Agraria Attitudes: parochial – fixed rules Customs: particularistic / inherited Status: ascriptive Functionally: diffuse Holistic Change Lack of Specialized Roles Result Agricultural, rural, poor Oral / illiterate Authoritarian instability Subsistence – non-monetary Revolution and violence Occupation fixed Industria Universalistic Legal / Rational Achievement Oriented Roles Functionally Specific High Degree of Technology Manufacturing and Production Oriented Result Commercial Democratic / Peaceful Occupational mobility Literate Urban, Rich Incrementalism, Stability and Gradual Change

10 II. Patron-Client Issues
"The patron-client relationship [is] an exchange relationship between roles." James C. Scott

11 James C. Scott (born 2 December 1936) is Professor of Political Science at Yale University

12 Theories of agricultural development: Issue: Peasant farmer as decision-maker
1. Moral Economy- social and family obligations predominate 2. Rational Economy- peasants are economically rational- self serving 3. Patronage and Exchange Theory-rural dwellers seek protection in Zero Sum political Games (James Scott)

13

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15 Review: Land Tenure Usufruct Legal Individual Access but no ownership
Common Access Issue of Credit Debate about Property Rights

16 Usufruct Debates Usufruct is the right of a person to derive profit or benefit from property that either is titled to another person or which is held in common ownership

17 Moral Economy The need to work collectively to meet common needs

18 III. Role of Agriculture in development: Seven Views
Source of economic surplus Obstacle to growth Necessary pre-requisite to modernization Key to development but suffers from urban bias

19 Lack of Economic Surplus

20 Urban Bias

21 Role of Agriculture in development-
Potentially leading sector- eg. France and Denmark Related to environmental degradation- problems of resource consumption -re. population Controversy sustainable development and "ecological balance

22 Lurpak- Danish Dairy Production

23 IV. Service Delivery: NGOs, agriculture and the Private Sector
a. The role of government vs. the role of private sector, cooperatives and NGOs b. Agriculture the cornerstone of rural areas C. Development external to the country (Agribusiness)

24 A Biased View?

25 Service Delivery-2 d. Controversy over export based agriculture. Add on value e. Issue: subsistence agriculture, little income generation or job creation

26 Tea Plantation

27 Service Delivery-3 f. Women and the effect of subsistence vs. cash crops g. Land reform, land tenure and usufruct- The failure of Land Tenure Changes h. Government: (Bates) Marketing Boards, prices and urban bias and the exploitation of Farmers i. The faded glory of integrated rural development. From Social Development to Social Funds

28 Models: Agriculture and private and non-profit sector
1. Public-Private partnerships (collaboration) 2. Associations as local appointed agents of peasants- not directly representative in a self- governance sense (Cooperatives)

29 Community Based Rural Association

30 Models-2: Continued 3. Direct involvement
(eg. water groups, producers cooperatives) Issue: Representation and problems of scale (eg. Elinor Ostrom)

31 Direct Self Governance?

32 Models-3 4. Issue of service delivery which is non-hierarchical
i. Need to adapt to the field (manual water pumps) ii. The Farms systems research and training and visit (T & V) techniques

33 Training and Visit System (T&V) Southest Asia

34 Models-4 5. The role of incentives for farmers: self-organization, self-management, and its alternatives 6. NGOs as Foreign Aid contractors (Beltway Bandits)

35 National Endowment for Democracy

36 The Foreign Aid Fix Saving Africa

37 V. People Centered Development
a. Bottom Up b. Community Development c. Micro-enterprises and micro-credit d. Rapid Rural Appraisal 37

38 VI. Debates: Public Choice
“Agriculture is about ‘getting the prices right’“ A Public Choice Mantra- Robert H. Bates

39 Robert Bates The state distorts agricultural marketing structures to divert gains to be had from commercial agriculture to other interest groups (the organizational bourgeoisie) employed in the state and in state controlled industries.

40 Author of the Week- Robert Bates
Markets and States in Tropical Africa Important influence on rational choice theory THESIS- Need to consider markets and how they can be distorted by state decisions in terms of producers and prices, consumer goods and factors of production

41 Supply and Demand Principles

42 Robert Bates Government policy subsidizes urban dwellers
Agricultural production used (or misused) to fund urban capital accumulation and/or capital flight The state, in effect taxes farmers for state sponsored “crony capitalism” and excessive access “rents”

43 Recent South African Cartoon

44 Robert Bates The result is the depression of prices for cash crops
The key to understanding the economic system in Africa is in historical patterns of prices depression that goes back to the colonial period. Monsopsonies- use of state agencies (often called marketing boards) to control marketing and sales of agricultural products.

45 Odisha Agricultural Marketing Board (India)

46 Exit Option: India Result: the “Exit Option” for rural dwellers. Red Sandlewood Smuggling Result- Structural Adjustment

47 Two: "Collective self-management of the resources is a socially and culturally embedded institutional arrangement..." Martinussen on Ostrom

48 Third Example: Elinor Ostrom
Essentialist- Ostrom: commons vs. individuals. Inability to manage public goods without individual direct interest involvement. 48

49 Public Choice vs. Common Pool Resources
Interview with Elinor Ostrom VIDEO

50 Four- Public Choice and Rationalism
4. Public Choice: Peasant Organizations, Popkin and The Free Rider Problem   =The overall issue is that of Collective Action vs. individual choice =Question: What is there between collectivization and privatization 50

51 Samuel L. Popkin University of California- San Diego

52 The Motivation of Conservative Discourse “Debates”
Tendency is to avoid collective responsibility or collective action 1. Common Pool Resources Problem 2. Prisoners dilemma- can never get to optimal 3. Change the rules of the game” and “getting the institutions right” 4. Key: getting direct involvement (Ostrom) 52

53 More Motivations 5. Designing their own contract with your neighbors in Mass Society 6. Critique: How does one ratchet up from local communities (and direct democracy) to cities, intermediate governments and nations and (lesson) avoid collective responsibility? 53

54 Motivations and an Issue
Historical Antecedents for Collective Action: Max Weber and complex bureaucratic systems Maintain power and control through exclusive control over access to water  Water the Key to local development 54

55 Pre-Keynesian State Planning
a. "Hydraulic Societies" and centralized bureaucratic empires (China, Egypt and Rome) b. Classic administrative systems elitist, hierarchical and rational vs. state roles in industrialization (Late developers- Germany and Japan c. Public Choice says public organizations require collective responsibility that is almost impossible, yet history shows bureaucracies can be collective (New Deal)

56 An Afterthought: Politics, 1964 and the Tom Lehrer “Theory of Governance”
The Theory


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